In a bit of “reverse
engineering” research using brain tissues from five people who died with
Alzheimer’s disease, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they discovered
that a special sugar molecule could play a key role in the development of
Alzheimer’s disease. If further research confirms the finding, the molecule,
known as a glycan, could serve as a new target for early diagnostic tests,
treatments and perhaps prevention of Alzheimer’s disease, say the researchers.
The study was published online April 20 in the Journal
of Biological Chemistry.
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common
form of dementia in the United States. Affecting an estimated 5.8 million Americans, the progressive disorder occurs when nerve cells in
the brain die due to the buildup of harmful forms of proteins called amyloid
and tau.
Cleaning up the disease-causing forms of
amyloid and tau is the job of the brain’s immune cells, called microglia.
Earlier studies found that when cleanup is impaired, Alzheimer’s disease is
more likely to occur. In some people, this is caused by an overabundance of a
receptor on the microglia cells, called CD33.
“Receptors are not active on their own.
Something needs to connect with them to block microglia from cleaning up these
toxic proteins in the brain, says Ronald Schnaar, Ph.D., the John Jacob Abel
Professor of Pharmacology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
and director of the laboratory that led the study.
Past studies by the researchers showed
that for CD33, these “connector” molecules are special sugars. Known to
scientists as glycans, these molecules are ferried around the cell by
specialized proteins that help them find their appropriate receptors. The
protein-glycan combination is called a glycoprotein.
In a bid to find out which specific
glycoprotein connects with CD33, Schnaar’s research team obtained brain tissue
from five people who died of Alzheimer’s disease and from five people who died
from other causes from the Johns Hopkins Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. Among the many thousands of glycoproteins they
gathered from the brain tissues, only one connected to CD33.
To identify this mystery glycoprotein,
the researchers first needed to separate it from the other brain glycoproteins.
Since it was the only one in the brain that attached itself to CD33, they used
this feature to “catch” it and separate it.
Glycans are made up of various sugar
building blocks that influence the molecule’s interactions. Such sugars can be
identified by their component parts. The researchers used chemical tools to
deconstruct the glycan step by step, laying out the identity and order of its
building blocks. The researchers identified the glycan portion of the
glycoprotein as sialylated keratan sulfate.
Then, the researchers determined the
protein component’s identity by taking its “fingerprint” using mass
spectroscopy, which identifies protein building blocks. By comparing the
molecular makeup of the protein with a database of known protein structures, the
research team was able to conclude the protein portion of the glycoprotein was
receptor tyrosine phosphatase (RPTP) zeta.
The researchers named the combined
glycoprotein structure RPTP zeta S3L.
The group had previously found the same glycan “signature” on a protein that
controls allergic responses in the airway, and that disrupting the glycan
dampened allergic responses in mice.
“We suspect the glycan signature carried
on RPTP zeta may have a similar role in deactivating microglia through CD33,”
says Anabel Gonzalez-Gil Alvarenga, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow in the Schnaar
laboratory and first author of the study.
Further experiments showed that the
brain tissue of the five people who died with Alzheimer’s disease had more than
twice as much RPTP zeta S3L as the donors who did not have the disease. This
implies that this glycoprotein may be connecting with more CD33 receptors than
a healthy brain, limiting the brain’s ability to clean up harmful proteins.
“Identifying this unique glycoprotein
provides a step toward finding new drug targets and potentially early
diagnostics for Alzheimer’s disease,” says Gonzalez-Gil.
Next, the researchers plan to further
study RPTP zeta S3L’s structure to determine how its attached glycans give the
glycoprotein its unique ability to interact with CD33.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
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